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SEWELL, Philip Beauchamp (1893-1918) +

SEWELL, Philip Beauchamp (1893-1918)


P B Sewell (War Service).

P B Sewell (War Service).

Philip Beauchamp Sewell was born on 8 August 1893 at Coleraine, the son of Thomas Murcott Sewell and Sarah Amelia nee Bull.

He was a day student at Geelong College from 1907 until 1910, when he went on to Melbourne University, and graduated MB BS from Melbourne University in 1916. He enlisted in the Australian Army Medical Corps (AAMC) as a Captain on 12 September 1916. He embarked from Adelaide on HMAT A35 Berrima on 16 December 1916 for France, where he served firstly with 13th Field Ambulance from 28 August 1917, then 12th Field Ambulance from 10 September, before he was posted as Medical Officer to 50 Battalion on 2 October. He was killed by a machine gun bullet on 24 April 1918 while establishing a first aid post near Villers Bretonneux.

Bean wrote in his Official History:
‘Captain P B Sewell (Malvern), MO of the 50th, was killed near Villers Bretonneux. Captain Forsyth of the 52nd afterwards moved his own men to Cachy, where he found Sewell’s men. The bearers of the 13th Field Ambulance took all the wounded from his post by 4 p.m. on the 25th. Forsyth was himself wounded.’

Sewell’s medical orderly, Cpl C F Donnelly spoke in glowing terms of his superior officer:
‘Re the death and burial of Captain P B Sewell, the following particulars are correct and may be relied upon. I was his Field Orderly, afterwards his First Aid Corporal. On the night of 24-7-18 about 9.30 pm we moved off from the forest near Villers Bretonneux, we were going forward to a counter-attack, Captain Sewell was in the rear of the Battalion, with his First Aid men, and 12 Amb. bearers. When we arrived at Cachy which was 500 yards from where we were to establish an Aid Post, we came under very heavy shell and MG fire. We moved forward about 350 yards when the shell fire was deafening and blinding, we were within a few hundred yards of the enemy, here Captain Sewell ordered his men into a small trench, while he himself, alone, went forward to HQ 150 yards away to find our exact position. After waiting for about two hours for his return, I went forward myself and found that he had never reached HQ. His body was found three days later, about 200 yards to the left, at the bottom of a large shell hole. Some think that he had misjudged his direction a little, but we who knew him intimately believed that he had heard the cry of wounded for help, many of whom were lying about, and had gone over to bandage them up. This is the most probable cause of his being out of the line, for he was fearless and would go and do anything for the wounded. Never was man more liked and respected than he, nor was man ever missed by those who knew him. He had been shot through the throat by a machine gun, his death had been instantaneous. There was a smile upon his face, and no sign of any struggling. His body was carried back about three miles and buried in a Military Cemetery known as Le Petit Blangy Caberet Cemetery, now named the Austral Cemetery, but its former name is the official one. His grave number is 958. It is situated on the Amiens-Villers Bretonneux Road, about 4 miles from Villers Bretonneux. Name on board outside Austral Cemetery.’

Padre Sydney Leonard Buckley, 13th Bde HQ, read the service at the graveside, and Bugler Horton Joseph Jennison, 50 Battalion Band, played the Last Post. Jennison gave these details to the Red Cross Information Bureau, also stating that ‘he (Sewell) came to us from 13th Field Ambulance, educated at Prince Alfred College, Adelaide, was a medical student’.

Phillip Sewell was re-interred in Villers Breton-neux Military Cemetery, Fouilloy - Grave X.E.6. This cemetery was made after the Armistice when graves were brought in from other burial grounds in the area and from the battlefields.

Phillip's brothers, Robert Murcott Sewell (1887-1944); Cedric Whilton Sewell (1889-1965) and Henry Edward Sewell (1892-1959) were all students at Geelong College.


Sources: Based on an edited extract from Geelong Collegians at the Great War compiled by James Affleck. pp107-108 (citing The University of Melbourne: Record of Active Service of Teachers, Graduates, Undergraduates, Officers and Servants (1926); C E W Bean, Official History of Australia in the War of 1914-18: Vol. V The AIF in France 1918; Pegasus August, 1918; Australian War Memorial; Commonwealth War Graves Commission; Photo Pegasus August, 1918.)
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